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Report: Witness says gate blocked when lion killed intern

BURLINGTON, N.C. (AP) — A witness told authorities a gate blocked by a ball at a North Carolina animal preserve allowed a lion to reach three people cleaning an enclosure and begin a fatal attack, biting one intern’s ankle and pulling her into the enclosure, according to a medical examiner’s report.

Lt. Eugene Riddick of the Caswell County Sheriff’s Department advised that animal trainer Ashley Watts reported separating the 14-year-old lion named Matthai into a section of an enclosure at the Conservators Center in Burlington on Dec. 30, according to the report first reported on by WRAL-TV. But Watts said the gate that secures that section was blocked by a large ball and the lion entered the area that Watts, 22-year-old intern Alex Black and a second intern were cleaning and attacked Black, the report states. Watts tried to separate them, but before she could close the gate, Matthai bit Black’s ankle and pulled her into the enclosure.

Riddick advised that fire department personnel used a firehose to separate the lion and Black without success, according to the report. The lion dragged Black around the enclosure by her neck “for an extended amount of time.” After attempts to sedate the lion with darts failed, deputies shot the lion eight times, killing the animal and ensuring Black’s body could be safely recovered, the report said.

The initial assessment showed Black died from multiple deep lacerations to the neck with significant blood loss, according to the report. It lists the probable cause of death as “Mauling by Animal.”

In a statement provided to WFMY-TV, the center disputes reports that the gate was obstructed by a ball, saying that is “neither accurate nor plausible.” However, the center does not explain how the lion was able to reach the three.

The attack occurred less than two weeks after Black, a recent college graduate from New Palestine, Indiana, had begun working at the nonprofit wildlife facility. The center, described recently as a “community zoo” by its executive director, was founded in 1999.

USDA inspections in 2017 and 2018 found no problems at the center, according to government reports. A government inspector counted 16 lions among 85 total animals in 2018.

The center stresses in its statement that as an intern, Black wasn’t responsible for the accident and that “all credible evidence” indicates that she was “killed almost instantly” and first responders were “conducting a recovery not a rescue.” The center reviewed safety policies and procedures and re-trained staff, and said it’s confident that, when followed, those existing policies and procedures are sufficient.